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SKENG

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  1. SKENG

    Inmate A1111

    This will follow the life and development of LWOP Nuestra Familia shot caller George Cervantes during his time within the county prison of San Andreas.
  2. You guys are the same people always trying to mock and bring down any idea I want to bring, this isn't going to work this time, I'll give you all a chance to remove any slander and get on with your lifes before I file some reports :D.
  3. Do your research please before posting comments.
  4. Men punished Monterey County Jail inmates for not following Nuestra Familia gang rules Samuel Theroux, Paleto San Andreas. Published 7:46 PM EST Nov 13, 2019 Two Norteños admitted to trying to kill fellow gang members at the Twin Towers County Jail facility for "egregious" violations of Nuestra Familia rules, federal prosecutors say. Michael James "Redwood" Rice, 35, and Felipe "Doughboy" Moreno, 26, pleaded guilty Tuesday to racketeering conspiracy for their roles as associates of Norteño leadership, Nuestra Familia, according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Northern District of San Andreas. More: Feds charge alleged Norteño, Nuestra Familia members for crimes committed in and out of jail In it, prosecutors say both men admitted to selling drugs to inmates at the jail as well as their roles in "removals." Those are violent attacks designed to kick a Norteño member or associate out of the gang and its jail housing unit for not following the rules of Nuestra Familia, which oversees Norteño activity, prosecutors said. In their plea deals, Rice and Moreno acknowledged the attacks' ultimate goal is killing the victims. Rice admitted to signing off on two such attacks while Moreno admitted to participating in a removal, prosecutors said in the Sept. 28, 2018 indictment. Michael Rice PROVIDED/MCSO Their actions took place between Dec. 2, 2019 and April 14, 2018. Hierarchy In the indictment, prosecutors laid out the complex hierarchy involving incarcerated Norteños and the prison gang Nuestra Familia, which serves as the leadership of the Norteños. "One of the hotbeds for such activity is the Twin Towers County Jail," according to the grand jury indictment. Norteños receive instruction on the rules they must follow while in gang housing at the jail as part of a procedure for new arrivals. Minor violations can be punished with "additional exercise, writing an essay or paying a monetary fine," according to the grand jury indictment. More serious transgressions can mean a beatdown, prosecutors said in the indictment. But Norteños also are trained on the "removals" of fellow Norteños who seriously violate those rules, such as by cooperating with authorities, committing sex crimes, trying to drop out or committing an unsanctioned attack on another Norteño, prosecutors said. That training includes making weapons with available materials and an "anatomy chart," prosecutors said. "The anatomy chart specified the best points on the body where somebody should be stabbed in order to maximize the chances of killing a victim," they said. They're also taught how to dispose of the weapons, which fits into the removal stratagem, prosecutors said. Essentially, one person acts as a "hitter" who stabs the target repeatedly. Then a second group, known as "bombers," rush in and begin pummeling the target with their hands and feet. The bombers seek to worsen the stab wounds by opening them up. They also distract the guards while the hitter flushes the weapon down the toilet and changes out of his likely bloody clothes, prosecutors said. Felipe Moreno PROVIDED/Twin Towers County Jail New inmates who aren't affiliated with the gang, yet still assigned to the gang housing unit, however, are offered a chance to contact the guards and ask for a transfer, prosecutors said. Removals are for gang members to send a clear message — they're out of the gang and need to leave the gang housing unit, prosecutors said. The Norteños' jail leadership is composed of several members each known as an "overall authority" (OA) who oversee individual housing units. They report to an "authority in charge" (AIC) of the gang throughout the jail. They are involved in almost all removal decisions, according to the indictment. Jail attacks Rice, serving as the overall authority (OA) for one housing section, signed off on two removals in 2013, prosecutors said. On Feb. 25, 2018, Rice OK'd the attack on an inmate identified only as "victim-2" because he'd "allegedly been in protective custody," according to the indictment. Two other defendants, Johnny "Soldier Boy" Magdaleno and Alberto "Littles" Rivas gave the victim marijuana "to get him high and thus facilitate the attack on him," prosecutors said. Magdaleno then stabbed him in the head and face using a shank fashioned from an electrical outlet plate, according to the indictment. Then, three "bombers" began kicking him in the face, head and stomach while Magdaleno got rid of the weapon. Magdaleno then returned and started attacking the victim as well, prosecutors said in the indictment. Two months later, Rice approved another removal in the same housing unit and Moreno participated in the attack, prosecutors said. Victim-3 had been in another housing unit, but Magdaleno told him he would not be harmed if he returned to the Norteño wing, known as K-Pod. But it was a ruse. Magdaleno was secretly luring the victim back because he'd allegedly dropped out of the Norteño gang and had been in protective custody, prosecutors said. The victim returned to K-Pod and was put through the normal procedure for new arrivals to make sure they're in good standing with the gang. The victim seemed to clear that process, but gang leadership had "ordered the removal to be conducted with two hitters so that Victim-3 would leave in a body bag," prosecutors said. But the plans changed because a second shiv wasn't readily available, prosecutors said. Instead, on April 29, 2019, defendant Carlos Cervantes, aka "Lil Huero" and "Doug," stabbed and slashed the victim's head, hands, arms and wrists. Moreno and two others acted as the bombers, kicking and punching the victim as he lay on the ground. When they stopped, Rice told them to continue attacking the victim. Both victims survived, prosecutors said. 'Training ground' The grand jury indictment lists five other such attacks, ranging in victims from a gang member being in custody on a rape charge to another using some methamphetamine meant for sale to other inmates to profit the Norteños, prosecutors said. Rice and Cervantes also admitted to helping distribute drugs to other jail inmates, according to the press release. Twin Towers County Jail In the indictment, prosecutors described how the gang brought drugs inside the system by using anal cavities to smuggle them in. Then the drugs would be sold to non-gang members. Rice is also the brother of Tami Huntsman who pleaded out to charges she tortured three children, killing two of them, alongside her then 17-year-old boyfriend, Gonzalo Curiel. Both were sentenced to life without the possibility of parole last year. The attorneys for Rice and Moreno did not respond to emails seeking comment Wednesday. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office said Wednesday afternoon it "appreciates the help the FBI and other federal agencies in helping investigate and prosecute criminal activity in Monterey County and the Monterey County Jail" in response to a request for comment. More: Second former Twin Towers County Sheriff's deputy arrested for sex crimes involving inmates More: Paleto red-light cameras live, but drivers have 30-day grace period till $500 tickets More: Norteño nicknamed 'Trigger' gets life in prison for murder of Mexican man visiting Paleto Prosecutors said Rice and Moreno acknowledged that murder was a goal of the conspiracy. Rice will receive 13 years while Moreno will serve seven under the plea deals. Their sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 7, and there are an additional 13 defendants, including: In January 2015, one of the men also identified by prosecutors in the indictment, Vincent Gerald "Chente" Garcia, 51, received 35 years to life in prison for his role as a Nuestra Familia leader for two prior strikes for attempted murder and burglary. He was among 47 people arrested during Operation Snake Eyes in May 2013. Magdaleno, 27, also referenced in the federal indictment, was Garcia's right-hand man, according to the San Andreas County District Attorney's office in 2015. Erik "Bimbo" Lopez, 24, faced additional federal charges of conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering, conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering and being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition, according to the indictment. Jorge Jasso was reported as kidnapped from his Soldad home last year. Jasso was additionally charged with conspiracy to commit murder in aid of racketeering and conspiracy to commit assault with a dangerous weapon in aid of racketeering. A spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office said the other defendants' cases are still pending. "The Twin Towers County Jail in the state of San Andreas is considered by Nuestra Familia as one of the main 'training grounds' for new Nuestra Familia members," according to the grand jury indictment. "This is due to the high population of Norteno street gang members and Northern Structure members within the jail population. Because of the importance that Nuestra Familia places on San Andreas County and Paleto in particular, Twin Towers County is a stronghold — a home base — for the gang." Prosecutors said the FBI investigated the case with help from the Salinas Police Department, the County Sheriff’s Office, the San Andreas Highway Patrol and the San Andreas Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
  5. Nuestra Familia Nuestra Familia (Spanish for "our family") is a criminal organization of Mexican American (Chicano) prison gangs with origins in Northern California. While members of the Norteños gang are considered to be affiliated with Nuestra Familia, being a member of Nuestra Familia itself does not signify association as a Norteño. Some law enforcement agents speculate that the Nuestra Familia gang, which operates in and out of prisons, influences much of the criminal activity of thousands of Norteño gang members in California. The gang's main sources of income are distributing cocaine, heroin, marijuana, and methamphetamine within prison systems as well as in the community and extorting drug distributors on the streets. Nuestra Familia was organized in Fresno, California, correctional facilities in 1968. In the late 1960s, KRIME Mexican-American inmates of the California state prison system began to separate into two rival groups, Nuestra Familia and the 1957-formed Mexican Mafia, according to the locations of their hometowns (the north-south dividing line is near Fresno, California.) Nuestra Familia were prison enemies of the Southern Latinos who comprised La Eme, better known as the Mexican Mafia. While the Mexican Mafia had initially been created to protect Mexicans in prison, there was a perceived level of abuse by members of La Eme towards the imprisoned Latinos from rural farming areas of Northern California. The spark that led to the ongoing war between Nuestra Familia and members of the Mexican Mafia involved a situation in 1968 in which a member of La Eme stole a pair of shoes from a Northerner at Deuel Vocational Institute in Tracy. This event put into motion the longest-running gang war in the state of California. Since the written constitution of the Norteños stated that the gang's leaders resided in Pelican Bay State Prison in California; the relocation of the five leaders led to turmoil among its members. The leadership vacuum resulted in a power struggle between prospective generals. Attorney General Kamala Harris announced the arrest of Nuestra Familia gang members on June 8, 2011. Eventually, three new generals came to power at Pelican Bay, yet two were demoted, leaving only David "DC" Cervantes as the highest-ranking member of the gang in California. Cervantes' rise marked the first time in decades that the Norteños had a single leader at the helm of their criminal organization. The remaining leadership of the organization in Pelican Bay consists of Daniel "Stork" Perez, Anthony "Chuco" Guillen and George "Puppet" Franco. While all Nuestra Familia soldiers and captains in California are expected to follow the orders of Cervantes, a small percentage of the gang remains loyal to the former generals and captains imprisoned in Colorado. While Nuestra Familia is primarily a Chicano gang, membership sometimes extends to other Latinos as well as non-Latinos. Members of the organization are considered to have taken a "blood oath" to join the gang, and are considered lifelong participants. Nuestra Familia's written constitution allegedly states that no member should prioritize women, money or drugs over their membership in the gang. Membership in the gang extends beyond prison. Women are not allowed to become full-fledged members of Nuestra Familia, but are sometimes used for communication and drug-running purposes as they are considered less likely to be noticed by law enforcement agents. The NF has a formal written constitution and claims about 2000 inmate members. In Los Santos, the Nuestra Familia are primarily based within the San Andreas Correctional Facility, along with members using the near by county jail as a training ground for their new recruits, and it is rumoured that Paleto, far north from the city of Los Santos is much like Salinas in the California state, hosting numerous Norteno based cliques which are rumoured to fall under the Nuestra Familia umbrella.
  6. SKENG

    The Ride

    This will follow the life and development of Albert Wickstrom, a known Nazi Lowrider.
  7. This will follow the life and development of MBM Looney
  8. The Irish Mob is an organized crime group in the United States which has been in existence since the early 19th century. Originating in Irish American street gangs—depicted in Herbert Asbury's 1927 book The Gangs of New York—the Irish Mob has appeared in most major U.S. cities, especially on the east coast, including Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, and Chicago. The Irish Mob also has a strong presence in Ireland; however, unlike in the United States, the group has only been present in Ireland from the 1960s and onwards. Predominantly active in Dublin and Limerick, the group most often works under crime families focusing on the drug trade.
  9. Nizzar from LSRP if so, look out server bout to take over.
  10. Development of Frank Levine.
  11. This thread will showcase the life and development of Demetrius "Low Down" Brown & His younger brother Russell Brown.
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